Re: [PATCH 1/1] regmap: cache: downgrade log level for no cache defaults message
From: Mark Brown
Date: Mon Nov 28 2022 - 13:39:24 EST
On Mon, Nov 28, 2022 at 03:58:40PM +0100, Alexander Stein wrote:
> Am Freitag, 25. November 2022, 20:30:52 CET schrieb Mark Brown:
> > In this case if you can't use a rbtree cache I would recommend
> > bootstrapping by initially reading without a cache first to get the
> > default values, then replacing the regmap with one that uses the
> > defaults you just read. You'll need some care over suspend/resume
> > though.
> The driver I'm working on clk-renesas-pcie.c only has 8 registers, so there is
> no benefit to use a different cache than REGCACHE_FLAT.
There's a benefit when it comes to bootstrapping (though also a slight
performance cost, and non-atomicity).
> But I currently fail to see why this is only for non-sparse caches. This is
> printed even before the cache_ops init() is called.
We only go into hw_init() in the case where the map has specified
num_reg_defaults_raw, as you say you could trigger that for any cache
type but if you're using a sparse cache you're either going to provide
no defaults or provide defaults in the standard, sparse format rather
than the raw format so in practice it won't trigger.
> Before the call to regcache_hw_init() there is this comment:
> > /* Some devices such as PMICs don't have cache defaults,
> > * we cope with this by reading back the HW registers and
> > * crafting the cache defaults by hand.
> > */
> This is exactly what I want to do: Read back HW registers and create a cache.
> Actually regcache_hw_init() is exactly doing what you are suggesting:
> 1. reading HW registers into map->reg_defaults_raw
> 2.
> a) copy them into map->reg_defaults
> b) read HW register individually if 1. failed
The other thing with doing a readback to fill the cache is that it's a
potentially slow operation (depending on how big the cache is and the
bus in use) and also a potentially destructive one for things like clear
on read registers. If regmaps are doing this deliberately (which does
seem valid) we probably want a clearer mechanism for specifying it - I
think an explicit flag would do the trick.
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